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"A prisoner in a cabin," she groaned. "And yet they do not treat me badly. For my supper they set on the table the best they had. It meant a real sacrifice for them to give up this entire room to me, yet they did it. I can't understand it."
"But I must not let them defeat me!" She brought her feet down with a slap upon the clean scrubbed and sanded floor. "Somehow, by some means or another, I must make my way to Caleb Powell's home to-day."
Her eyes lighted upon an object that hung above the fireplace-a long barreled squirrel rifle with a shiny new cap resting beneath the hammer.
"Loaded," she thought. "Cap wouldn't be there if it wasn't. They left it hanging there because I am a girl and they were certain I couldn't shoot.
Hump! I can shoot as straight as any of them."
For a moment a wild vision whirled before her-a vision of a girl bursting from a room, yelling like a wild Indian and brandishing the long rifle above her head.
"No," she smiled. "'Twouldn't do. It would be very dramatic, but it would probably end in tragedy, and I have no desire to act a part in such a tragedy."
She dressed quickly, then stepped into the other room of the cabin where she found crisp, brown biscuits, wild honey and fried eggs awaiting her.
She ate a hearty breakfast. "Who knows what strength I may need for this day?" she thought to herself as she spread honey on her third biscuit.
After that, knowing from past experiences what her limitations would be, she did not attempt to go many steps from the cabin but contented herself with sitting outside the cabin door in the sun.
"Such a lovely scene," she sighed as she looked away and away to where the peaks of Pine Mountain blended with the bluer peaks of Big Black Mountain, and all at last were lost in the hazy mists of the morning.
"So peaceful," she thought, "you'd think there had never been a bit of trouble since the world began. And yet, right down here in the mountains there is more trouble than anywhere else in the country. Some men say that Nature, G.o.d's open book, will make men good and kind. It takes more than that. It takes-it must take G.o.d inside their hearts to accomplish that." So she mused, and half the morning slipped away.
From time to time her eyes left the mountain tops to follow the winding stream that, some fifty feet down a gentle slope, went rushing and tumbling over its rocky bed. Above and beyond this creek bed, at the other side of the gorge, ran a trail. Down that trail from time to time people pa.s.sed. Now a woman, leading a lean pack horse laden with corn, shambled along on her way to mill. Now a pair of active, shouting boys urged on a team of young bullocks. .h.i.tched to a sled, and now a bearded mountaineer, with rifle slung across his saddle horn, rode at a dog trot down the dusty trail.
The girl watched all this with dreamy eyes. They meant nothing to her; were, in fact, but a part of the scenery.
Still she watched the trail, taking little interest in the people pa.s.sing there until suddenly she came to life with surprising interest. A person of evident importance was pa.s.sing up the trail. He sat upon a blooded sorrel horse, and across the pommel of his saddle was a rifle.
"Who is that?" Florence asked, interested in the way this man sat his horse.
"That? Why, that are Caleb Powell." Her guard, who sat not far from her, had also spoken without thinking.
"Caleb Powell!" The girl sprang to her feet. In an instant her two hands were cupped into a trumpet and she had sent out a loud call.
"Whoo-hoo!"
Caught by rocky walls, the call came echoing back. The man on the blooded horse turned his gaze toward the cabin.
"Here, you can't do that away!" The guard put a rough hand on her shoulder.
"I can, and I will!" The girl's tone was low and fierce. "You take your hands away from me, and keep them off!" She jerked away. "I came back here to see him. He's a man, a real man, and he-he's got a rifle."
Cowering, the man fell back a step.
Again the girl's hands were cupped.
"Mr. Powell! Come over!" she called. "I have something important to tell you."
The man reined in his horse, stared across the gorge in apparent surprise, then directed his horse down a narrow path that led down one side of the gorge and up the other.
Standing there, leaning against the doorpost, the girl watched him with all the fascination that a condemned man must feel as he sees a man approaching with a message commuting his sentence.
The man who, a few minutes later, came riding up the steep trail to the cabin, was quite as different from the average mountaineer as Florence had, at a distance, judged him to be. His face was smooth shaven and his gray suit, his tie, his leggings, his riding boots, all were in good order. When at last he spoke it was not in the vernacular of the mountains, but of the wide world outside.
"You-you have some coal land?" she hesitated as he asked what he might do for her.
"Why, yes, little girl," he smiled as he spoke. "My brothers and I have several acres up these slopes."
Florence stiffened at his "little girl." She realized that he had used the term in kindness, but he must not think of her as a little girl. She was for a moment a business woman with an important transaction to carry through.
"You want to sell it?" she said briskly.
"We have offered to sell."
"For twenty-one thousand?"
"About that." He was staring at her now. He stared harder when she said: "I am authorized to buy it at that price."
For a moment he did not speak; just kept his keen grey eyes upon her.
"I am waiting," he said at last in a droll drawl, "for the smile."
"The-the smile?"
"Of course, you are joking."
"I am not joking." She was tempted to be angry now. "Here-here's the proof. It's the-Mr. Dobson called it the earnest money." She dragged the five hundred dollars in bank notes from her blouse.
For ten seconds after that her heart fluttered wildly. What if this whole affair were a game played by these men at her expense? What if this man was not Caleb Powell at all? The thought of the consequences made her head whirl.
But no, the guard of a half hour before was staring, popeyed, at the sheaf of bills.
"That looks like business," said Caleb Powell. "Your Mr. Dobson-I know him well. So he made you his agent? Well, well! That's singular. But men do strange things. I suppose he sent a contract?"
"Yes, yes." She was eager now. "Here it is."
"Well," he said quietly.
Then turning to the former guard, he said; "You'll not be wanting anything further of the girl, Jim?"
"Reckon not," the man drawled.
"Then, Miss-er-"
"Ormsby," she volunteered.
"Then, Miss Ormsby, if you'll be so kind as to mount behind me, I'll take you down to the house. We'll fix up the papers. After that we'll have a bite to eat and I'll send you over the mountain."
The hours that followed were long-to-be-remembered. The signing of the papers, the talk on the cool veranda, a perfect dinner, then the long, long ride home over the mountains on a perfect horse with a guide and guard at her side, and all this crowned by the consciousness of a wonderful success after days of perils and threatened failure; all these seemed a dream indeed.